Tag: France

E-BOX Demonstration at Post expo 2007 in Barcelona

The first intelligent C2C parcel shipping system was demonstrated by E-BOX at Post expo 2007 in Barcelona.

How does it work ?

1. Register with the postal operator
2. After registration, buy a barcode stamp from the postal operator (on the internet, shop, by mail or from a post office).
3. Stick the barcode stamp on the parcel.
4. Scan the barcode at the consol. The hatch unlocks after validation of the barcode (green light indicator).
5. Open the hatch and place the parcel inside the gateway enclosure.
6. Close the hatch. This will lock and allow the transfer of the parcel into the parcel collection box. You automatically receive notification of the transaction in real time by e-mail from the postal operator.

OPTION 1 : Notification of the transaction by SMS
OPTION 2 : Dedicated mail container inside the gateway enclosure for certified mail and electonic
notification by the postal operator.
OPTION 3 : Reinforced Identification of the sender with a double scan of the parcel barcode and the customer’s personal card.

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E-BOX is condemned by the TGI of Paris but it is La Poste which appeals

La Poste initiated a legal action against E-Box on 6 June 2006 and requested the cancellation of trade marks arguing the similarity to La Poste brands and claiming it could create confusion to the consumers. La Poste also requested EUR 215,000 for compensation.
On 11 March 2008, after 2 years of legal procedures, the Court of Justice issued its decision (This sentence is provisional since one of the parts can still appeal):

The tribunal:
– Condemns E-BOX for counterfeiting by imitation of the following brands: ’agence postale rapide ebox’’, agence postale jaune’’, agence postale orange’’,’’agence postale erte’’, ‘’point poste jaune’’, ‘’point poste orange’’, and ‘’point poste vert’’. E-BOX must pay to La Poste EUR 20,500.
– Declares inadmissible the counterclaim of EBOX against La Poste

In revenge the tribunal:
– Don’t approve the nullity of the ’agence postale rapide e-box’’ brand
– Declares the validity of the following E-BOX brands: ‘’post ebox’’, “e-box, l’ autre poste’’, et ‘’e-box, une autre idée de la poste’’.

La Poste decided to appeal to this sentence.

La Poste group announced the objective to EUR 850 million net profits for 2008. Even if E-Box “contribution” passed from EUR 20,000 to EUR 215,000, it will remain marginal in the accounts of La Poste.

Therefore, the action of the La Poste only aims to ensure the monopoly of the words “poste”, postal’, ‘postale’, ‘agence postale’ and seek to preserve the monopoly of the postal services in France.

Can be possible a healthy competition in the French postal market, where ARCEP is the regulator and guarantor, if the services suggested by competitor operators of La Poste cannot be understood by the consumers as being of postal nature?

By collateral effect, the continuation of legal actions from La Poste give value to E-BOX trade marks containing the word ‘poste’. But E-Box’s interest is to support the implementation of the European directives related to the liberalization of the postal markets and the creation of a competition model.

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John Acton appointed Managing Director of DPD

The supervisory board of DPD GmbH, Aschaffenburg, announces the appointment of Briton John Acton (43) to Managing Director of the international provider of standard and express parcel services. After the departure of CEO Hans Fluri in March this means that the top management of the international franchise organisation has been completed from within the company’s own ranks. At the head of the DPD franchise system Mr Acton will form a two-man team with Arnold Schroven, who is also at the helm of DPD GeoPost (Germany).

In addition to his appointment as Managing Director of DPD Mr Acton is Chief Marketing and Strategic Accounts Officer at GeoPost, and is a member of the Direction Générale of GeoPost

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The Future of Mail by Air

A project to develop a postal air waybill (PAWB) and several related activities could enable airlines to manage mail traffic as part of their general cargo systems very soon, with significant cost and service benefits to their postal service customers. Air cargo and airmail must now travel internationally with different documents: the air waybill and postal delivery bill consignment note. Separate processes are required to track the two traffic categories, a problem compounded by the fact that airlines use air waybills to track whole consignments, whereas postal organisations want to be able to track individual bags or trays.
To bring these systems together, airlines and the postal authorities will have to work together to integrate the functions of their cargo and mail system, explains Jörgen van Mook, manager of Operations Planning for the International Post Corporation. “Then the airlines can manage mail in their cargo systems and, over time, do away with the stand-alone systems they use only for mail.” That objective is a central element in a joint initiative called the Future of Mail by Air established in early 2006 by members of the IPC and a group of mail-carrying airlines, including AF-KL cargo.
The postal authorities want airlines to improve the quality of service they provide, particularly for tracking mail consignments, and at the same time charge them less. However, in aligning the processes and systems required to do this, they want to avoid changing the legal status of mail, says Mr. van Mook. “Mail has to remain mail and not become cargo.” Mail and cargo are ruled by different conventions, Mr. van Mook explains. “Mail is ruled by the Universal Postal Union Convention and carried under postal delivery bills. It also has separate procedures for customs clearance.”
The Patch
Postal authorities and airlines have come up with the clever idea of creating a postal air waybill number, a reference number that enables airline cargo systems to track mail without the legal status it would have travelling with an air waybill. “Manifesting mail in a cargo system under a postal air waybill number does not mean creating an electronic air waybill,” Mr. van Mook says. “Mail would continue to travel with a postal delivery bill. However, it would have a special handling code, MAL, in the airline tracking system. IATA recently approved this designation specifically to enable mail tracking. Using a PAWB number, carriers can identify traffic as mail in their cargo systems and identify it for customs.”
Stéphane Bocquet, AF-KL Cargo’s director of Airmail, says the PAWB development is significant. “We will be able to add more value for our customers in the postal sector by providing enhanced tracking and tracing at a reasonable cost. The mail situation today is similar to the time when carriers and forwarders agreed to develop Cargo 2000 in order to ensure better visibility of their shipments.” Moreover, the continuing development of Cargo 2000 could also play a role in the airmail sector, adds Marloeke Werst, AF-KL Cargo’s sales director of Airmail Services. “Cargo 2000 provides the status messages required for tracking cargo based on the use of air waybill numbers. If we introduce postal air waybill numbers for airmail, then it opens the possibility of using Cargo 2000 to generate the messages for that traffic as well.”
In Practice
“The idea now is to let individual airlines and postal authorities decide how they want to number their mail shipments,” says Christophe Eggers, international networks manager for La Poste. The process starts when the post enters the airline booking system and creates a profile for tracking. Then, either the airline issues a PAWB number or the post provides the airline with a number. In one case, the airline could send an allotment of
PAWB’s to the post, which could allocate them to shipments as it sees fit and inform the carrier accordingly. Alternatively, the post could send the airline an EDI

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La Poste acquisition strengthens UK presence

La Poste Group, has acquired BTB Mailflight, a UK based fulfillment and mailing company, to strengthen its position in the UK mail market.

The move is part the group’s long-term international expansion plan, and enhances its existing services in the UK by allowing the company to provide postal collection and sorting before ‘final mile’ delivery by Royal Mail.

The group already offers a range of direct marketing service in the UK via La Poste UK, which includes data management, document preparation, mail collection and franking, and worldwide mail distribution.

La Poste Group managing director Raymond Redding says: “This acquisition fits perfectly into our external growth strategy, which aims to reinforce our position as a major player worldwide and ultimately become the European leader in all forms of mail.

“Now, we will be able to operate in the part of the UK mail process which precedes ‘final mail’ delivery, giving us a deeper understanding of the UK postal market, developing our offer to customers and, in turn, enabling us to increase market share.”

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